Viññāṇaṃ anidassanaṃ can also refers to Nibbana?
…sabbatopabhaṃ. (The place where vinnana is unseen, where it is boundless and full of light at every corner -> refers to Nibbana) or (Vinnana is unseen, where it is boundless…
A Quest to Recover Buddha's True Teachings
…sabbatopabhaṃ. (The place where vinnana is unseen, where it is boundless and full of light at every corner -> refers to Nibbana) or (Vinnana is unseen, where it is boundless…
…dissatisfied with “pañca kāma” and pursue “jhānic pleasures.” They are reborn in “rupa loka,” where the three “close contacts” are absent. Some of those yogis go beyond jhānās and cultivate…
…In rupa and arupa loka, avijjā is triggered by ‘rupa saññā‘ (causing ‘jhānic pleasures’) and ‘arupa saññā‘ (causing ‘arupa samāpatti pleasures’) respectively. November 29, 2025 Few Suttās Even Mention Pañcakkhandha…
…sanna, sankhara and vinnana also behave the same pattern as that of the suddkastaka. Thus, I gained knowledge to see how 8 elements come together and pass away and that…
…the rupa of the mental body related to the total rupa in pancakkhandha? C) What happens to a Brahma being in the arupa loka that has no manomaya kaya and…
…“ajjhatta vinnana” because it will not attach to the “distorted sanna” or specifically “distorted kama sanna” in this case. For a puthujjana, the “ajjhatta vinnana” is only the starting point…
…Mainly jhanic pleasures. Viparinama dukha when close death. Suppression of kāma rāga and cultivation of rupāvacara jhāna (while in the human realm) Arupāvacara Brahma (only hadaya vatthu and mind) Only…
…particular realm of existence according to its kamma. There are thirty-one realms of existence in Buddhist cosmology, divided into three main categories: the sense realm (kamaloka), the form realm (rupaloka)…
…and sankhara are all nama, and rupa is all rupa, vinnana is the bridge between nama and rupa, leading to namarupa: “vinnana paccaya namarupa“. That is a subtle point, so…
Revised January 2, 2019; last revised January 10, 2026 Lōbha, Dosa, and Mōha 1. Lōbha is extreme greed; see, “Lōbha, Rāga, and Kāmaccanda, Kāmarāga.” One is willing to do any…